Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,380,416 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Galileo at Jupiter: the goodbye tour. (Astronomy).


Hampered by a communications antenna that never unfurled, the Galileo spacecraft became known as the plucky pluck·y  
adj. pluck·i·er, pluck·i·est
Having or showing courage and spirit in trying circumstances. See Synonyms at brave.



pluck
 mission that overcame major obstacles. During more than 6 years of touring Jupiter and its four largest moons, the spacecraft managed to radio some 5 gigabytes of data to Earth, including more than 14,000 images. It has recorded towering volcanic plumes above Jupiter's moon Io, gathered evidence that Europa might have an ocean beneath its icy carapace carapace (kâr`əpās), shield, or shell covering, found over all or part of the anterior dorsal portion of an animal. In lobsters, shrimps, crayfish, and crabs, the carapace is the part of the exoskeleton that covers the head and thorax , and investigated the intense radiation environment near Jupiter.

Now, 13 years after its launch, the mission is winding down. During several flybys of Io, Galileo has received nearly 4 times the radiation dose it was designed to endure. On Jan. 17, a half-hour before the craft took its last swing past Io's rarely glimpsed Jupiter-facing side, radiation damage caused Galileo to temporarily shut down. As a result, the craft never took close-up images as it passed just 102 kilometers from the moon's surface.

In addition, the spacecraft has nearly run out of the hydrazine hydrazine (hī`drəzēn'), chemical compound, formula NH2NH2, m.p. 1.4°C;, b.p. 113.5°C;, specific gravity 1.011 at 15°C;. It is very soluble in water and soluble in alcohol.  fuel needed to keep its only working antenna pointed toward Earth.

NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 decided last month to permanently shut down the craft's two cameras, a visible-light detector, and a near-infrared mapping spectrometer spectrometer

Device for detecting and analyzing wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, commonly used for molecular spectroscopy; more broadly, any of various instruments in which an emission (as of electromagnetic radiation or particles) is spread out according to some
. Another light-sensing device, a combination photopolarimeter and radiometer radiometer (rā'dēŏm`ətər), instrument for detection or measurement of electromagnetic radiation; the term is applied in particular to devices used to measure infrared radiation. , has also been switched off.

Those moves will save NASA some $750 thousand, but they mean that when Galileo flies within 500 km of the inner Jovian moon Amalthea in November, it will be blind. Only a magnetic field sensor and a high-energy-particle detector will continue to operate. Scientists also hope to generate a detailed gravity map of Amalthea by studying small changes in the speed of the craft as it passes by.

The Galileo team will officially disband dis·band  
v. dis·band·ed, dis·band·ing, dis·bands

v.tr.
To dissolve the organization of (a corporation, for example).

v.intr.
1.
 next January, 9 months before the craft is set to plow into Jupiter. The huge planet was chosen for Galileo's demise to ensure the craft would not crash into Europa and destroy any life that might exist below its surface. --R.C.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Galileo spacecraft's cameras shut down
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Feb 23, 2002
Words:328
Previous Article:Infants emerge as picky imitators. (Behavior).(research on infant behavior)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Dinosaur tracks show walking and running. (Paleontology).(megalosaurus)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Visions of Europa: Galileo tour heightens speculation about life on Jovian moon.
Picturing a new world: views of Ganymede. (Galileo spacecraft captures images of Jupiter's satellite)(Brief Article)
Galileo probes structure of Jovian moons. (Galileo space probe images Ganymede, Io, Europa and Callisto)(Brief Article)
Galileo explores the Galilean moons; tidal tugs sculpt Jovian satellites.(Cover Story)
Craft eyes new evidence of a slushy Europa.(images of Jupiter's satellite from Galileo spacecraft)(Brief Article)
Icy cracks may betray Europan ocean.(evidence of subterranean ocean on Jupiter's moon)(Brief Article)
Galileo takes close-up snapshots of Io.(Galileo spacecraft records images of Jupiter's moon Io)(Brief Article)
Close Encounter: Galileo Eyes Io.(Jupiter's volcanic moon)
New views of Jovian moons.(Brief Article)
Telescope finds tiny moon of Jupiter.(17th known moon)(Brief Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles